B164111

This DTC indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit shorts to body ground (GND) — Seal U

Safety System

This DTC indicates the driver-side seat belt pretensioner ignition circuit shorts to body ground (GND).

The BYD SRS (Supplemental Restraint System) pretensioner typically uses a pyrotechnic or motor-driven design with an operating resistance of approximately 2.0–3.0 Ω.

When the ACU (Airbag Control Unit) detects the insulation resistance between the driver pretensioner circuit and ground drops below the threshold (typically <100 Ω), it logs a short to ground.

This fault triggers the SRS fail-safe mode: the airbag warning light remains illuminated, the affected pretensioner may fail to deploy during a collision, and the system may stop monitoring other restraint devices, posing a severe safety hazard.

The short circuit may occur at the pretensioner itself, the under-seat wiring harness, the floor wiring harness, or the ACU connector.

4
Cases Logged
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Worn seat rails caused wiring harness short to ground.

Vehicle: 2019 BYD Qin Pro DM, 32,000 km. The customer reported the airbag warning light stayed on. Retrieved DTC B164111. Found the seat rail edge had cut through the pretensioner wiring harness sheath beneath the driver's seat; bare copper wire contacted the metal rail, causing a short to ground. The root cause: a detached harness clip let the harness shift and get pinched during seat adjustment. Repair: repaired the damaged wire with heat-shrink tubing, rerouted and secured the harness, added anti-chafe sleeving, and replaced the seat rail felt pad to prevent direct contact. Cleared the DTC, and the system returned to normal.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

After water ingress, connector corrosion caused a short circuit.

Vehicle: E2 EV 2020, mileage 18,000 km. The airbag warning light came on after the vehicle drove through water. Diagnosis found active DTC B164111. Removing the driver seat revealed obvious silt and water stains inside the pretensioner connector (yellow 2-pin plug). Verdigris on the terminal surfaces caused the resistance between the pin and plug housing (ground) to measure only 12 Ω. Root cause: The sunroof drain hose connector had detached, letting rainwater run down the A-pillar into the seat area. Repair: Thoroughly cleaned the connector terminals with electronic cleaner and a precision brush, dried the plug, applied conductive protectant, and repaired the drain hose connector. The pretensioner itself was undamaged, so replacement was not needed.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Internal short in pretensioner caused circuit failure

Model: Qin EV 2019, 56,000 km. After accident repairs (front-end collision), DTC B164111 set and would not clear. Found the pretensioner had fired without replacement, with an internal squib short circuit. Measured pretensioner resistance at 0.3Ω (well below normal), with continuity to ground. Found the ACU had sent a deployment signal during the accident, but the pretensioner jammed mechanically and did not fully deploy, causing the internal coil to burn out and short circuit. Replaced the driver-side seat belt assembly (including pretensioner), checked the ACU crash records, and reset the SRS. Reminder: During accident repairs, check all restraint devices for prior deployment.
BYD DTC AI Analysis

Aftermarket seat heater installation pinched the wiring loom.

Model: E3 2020, Mileage: 21,000 km. After the customer installed an aftermarket seat heating pad, the airbag warning light illuminated. DTC B164111 appeared intermittently. Inspection found the installer had deviated from the original wiring route: the added heating pad harness crossed and pressed against the pretensioner wiring harness inside the seat foam, wearing through the insulation and causing contact with the seat frame. Repair: Removed the non-compliant heating pad (non-genuine modification voids warranty). Replaced the damaged pretensioner harness (damage point was on the airbag harness; entire harness replaced for reliability). Refitted the original harness clips.
Data confidence: Community This information is for reference only. Always consult a qualified technician for diagnosis and repair. Do not attempt high-voltage system repairs yourself.